I am just now beginning to learn some of the EPAK techniques.
Excellent!!! Enjoy!
....and WELCOME to Martial Talk! Though you are in Kenpo, make sure to venture to LOTS of the other sections, especially the "Beginners" section. Lots of good questions and issues raised by people just like you in similar situations, and answers from some very knowledgeable and experienced people from many different backgrounds and outlooks.
Don't miss it.
I am going to choose just the ones to my liking and incorporate them into my daily routine.
I would very respectfully suggest that this would be a
critical mistake on your part!!!!!! No offense, but as you are "just now beginning", what is to your "liking" would be difficult for you to judge beyond what is simply "easy". I'd suggest that this would be a foolhardy task for even an experienced Kenpoist!! Don't try to specialize! Seriously. I suggest you work all of your techniques, daily. IF you don't have a lot of time for this (which is a shame, it's the key thing beyond class attendance that a new student NEEDS the most) contact the head instructor at your studio and ask them to help you draw up a plan for your home practice time. I suggest working those techniques that are either New to you or those that you have some difficulty with first and most. Your abilities, you may find, will grow MORE from working these than things that are to your "Liking". Don't miss the good that's to be found in ALL of the system. MOST often: What you gain in one area or technique will greatly enhance your understanding and ability in many many more down the road. The foundation is being laid NOW, and as Frank Herbert said: "The beginning is a most crucial time."
Of you who know the whole system, do you feel that you are bogged down, or less spontaneous with this many techs floating in your head? Instead of having so many techs for the same thing (outside a right punch, or multiple two hand push defenses) I will just choose some to my liking and discard the others. I want your feedback on that.
The one thing that I would PLEAD with you over is to "
Discard" the
very idea of discarding ANYTHING. I can't think of anything else short of HARD street drugs that would so greatly inhibit your potential to learn and grow!! I know where you are coming from with the concerns about the amount of information and "Doesn't it bog you down".
The answer is NO. ((Though I, nor many others out there at all, "KNOW" The Whole system.......I am however Responsible for that which I DO know; because however much you DO know....IS Your System)) The thing is, when the time comes (God forbid) for you to Need your fighting skills......they will come, and you won't need to "Chose" what to do, you will have faced the "Right step forward punch" ((or whatever) so many times, at varying speeds, from various partners, time after time, with MULTIPLE answers......your ability to deal with it and adapt to what's occuring will be very spontaneous.
IMAGINE: If you only knew two responses for a right step through punch to the head.... then the attacker's action, body type or the limitations/liabilities of your environment prohibits you to use those two techniques....
You're screwed. (excuse the crass term please) BUT: if you know lots of responses to this AND similar attacks.... if you are well versed in many ways to deal with similar circumstances and have executed all of these IN A BALANCED WAY (not specializing)...your response will be MORE spontaneous and your ability to really adapt will be MUCH greater!!!! (not less)
It's a lot like learning another language and then going to visit the country where that language is THE language.
If I teach you French by handing you a book of the 10,000 most common French phrases/sentences and for five years you memorize 90% of them word for word and each words English interpretation...Great! But you're not fluent then....because once you travel to France and a Frenchman asks you a wordy question, constructed in a way that's NOT one of the 10,000 most common ways..........you're at a loss.
BUT: to be "
fluent" and be able to fluidly give a response appropriate to any conversation... you must understand
HOW those sentences are constructed and
WHY. ((
Learn BOTH: The
How of a technique and the
"Why",...otherwise you're getting less than HALF of what the art has to offer!)) THEN you'd be able to "Formulate"
your own response, wether it be w/in the confined parameters of a given phrase from "the book" OR spontaneously generated on your own, new...fresh......resembling some of the existing sentences from the book, but totally appropriate to the needs of the exact conversation.
You'll spend time studying and practicing the given "Sentences" and the "Book" should
not be 'discarded'...it is the detail of the "HOW" of the language and the vehicle to bring you to understand the "WHY"...but in the end, it's this ability to formulate extemporaneously that differentiates between a person who is 'studying' the language...........and someone who KNOWS the language!!
Think about it!
It's a pretty decent analogy, even if I do say so myself.
The other thing I wished to ask was the FLAME patch worn on the left side of the gi. Is this only for those who participated in the 1964 Internationals? Or is it now accepted for any EPAK (or any kenpo style) to wear it?
I got my first IKC patch (which you refer here to as "the FLAME patch") while I was a Tae Kwan Doist in the 80's. You get it by attending the International Karate Championships in Long Beach California.....that's all. You get it when you sign up and pay for your events.
I cherish mine!
Last one: is there still an IKKA organization? I see this rocker patch on older photos of EPAK folks, but not sure if it existed beyond Mr. Parker "leaving the building.. with elvis..."
I am NOT the one to answer this, there are those here that could though.
I am excited about learning some of these techniques.
I'm happy for you!!!! Seriously. Getting to meet the techniques, forms and sets for the first time was a BLAST!!!!! Learn them well and they will serve you well.
BUT: as before, I plead with you....don't be excited about "Some"; cultivate an interest and thirst for the Entire art. It is a "system", just like the human body is a 'system'....which part of the body would you neglect so that you could focus on your 'favorites"? Is that 'healthy'??
no...
Take care of ALL of it, and your favorites....as well as all the others, will be MUCH MUCH better off for it.
Keep training.........and keep it FUN
Your Brother
John